Report family or friends who are led astray by extremist ideology: Shanmugam

Home Affairs and Law Minister K. Shanmugam urged Singaporeans to tell the authorities if a family member or friend is being led astray by extremist ideology. ST PHOTO: ARIFFIN JAMAR

SINGAPORE - People need to come forward and alert law enforcement agencies if their family members or friends are being led astray by extremist ideology, said Home Affairs and Law Minister K. Shanmugam on Sunday (June 4).

He spoke to reporters a day after terrorists struck in the heart of London at London Bridge and Borough Market, killing six people and injuring another 48. There have been multiple terror attacks around the globe in the past month, from the bombing in Manchester at a concert by pop star Ariana Grande to twin suicide attacks in east Jakarta and a bombing in Kabul, Afghanistan.

Mr Shanmugam said that before such attacks, family and friends will often know if the potential attacker is going astray.

They thus have to bear the responsibility of informing security agencies, whose forces cannot be everywhere, he noted.

"You're helping that person, you're helping the society, you're helping the country." he said, adding: "When you keep quiet and an attack like this happen... you're doing a serious injustice to the system."

Mr Shanmugam also listed another four steps to guard against the threat of terrorism.

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"It has become routine for people to come forward and condemn. But that alone is not enough. We need to go beyond that," he said.

One way to do so is by condemning acts of terror unequivocally.

"No ifs, no buts, not just community leaders, not just religious leaders, but everyone, Muslims and non-Muslims. Come forward, make your stand clear and work for a united, tolerant, multi-racial, multi-religious society," he said.

"Condemn these people and their actions in clear terms. Religious leaders have a duty to encourage their congregations to do so."

Mr Shanmugam also warned against exclusivist, divisive teachings that preachers in many other countries propagate, calling it a "poison" that fed extremism.

Some of these teachings on an "us versus them" mentality are insidious, create divisions within society and are at odds with Singapore's tolerant, multi-cultural, multi-religious approach, he noted.

While the Government has frowned against it, further steps had to be taken, he said.

"Community leaders, religious leaders have a particular duty to make sure that our people are tolerant, that we greet each other, that we celebrate each other's festivals without ifs and without buts, that we understand that we live in a multiracial, multi-religious society."

"Anything else leads to society riven apart with deep rifts and eventually you will get (an attack)."

To that end, the country has to guard against anti-Muslim sentiments gaining ground, he stressed.

While people might be "politically-correct" in public, government surveys show such sentiments are growing, he said.

He cited an act of vandalism in which the word "terrorist" was scrawled on an illustration of a Muslim woman in a hijab at the site of the upcoming Marine Parade MRT station.

The contractor made a police report last Friday, and the police are investigating.

"The Government will act strongly and without any equivocation on this. We must set our face against it, should not allow it," he said.

"And non-Muslims have a duty to make sure that we also embrace our Muslim brothers and sisters and the Government will work towards that."

The minister added that as more terror attacks are carried out with everyday objects such as cars and knives, making them hard to prevent, it is critical that conditions allowing people to become radicalised be "nipped in the bud".

The Government actively intervenes to ensure different communities living together are integrated, prohibit extremist preaching, and arrest radicalised individuals, he said. "We have laws that allow us to intervene much earlier than agencies in other societies can."

Apart from relying on the law, the way to foster a moderate, tolerant society is by keeping unemployment low, and giving people economic and educational opportunities, he said.

As for preventing terror acts, Mr Shanmugam said people have a responsibility to alert security agencies to family members and friends who show signs of radicalisation.

"When we have an arrest, often the families or friends have told us, sometimes they have not," he said.

He said his ministry will give an update on some cases in the next few weeks, and highlight what the families did or did not do.

He also urged the entire community to participate in the SG Secure national movement, which was launched last year and aims to prepare people for how to respond in the event of a terrorist attack.

"Understand the Run, Hide, Tell message. Volunteer, get trained to save yourself, save your family and come together," he said. "We need everyone to participate."

Meanwhile, Education Minister (Schools) Ng Chee Meng stressed the need to build up social cohesion in preparation for any attack.

"Before the day comes when an attack succeeds in Singapore, we must build the strength now in relative peace to overcome the tensions that would occur," he said at a community event.

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